April 14, 2012–January 28, 2013 at the Getty Villa

A cache of over 30 votive offerings excavated from the sanctuaries of the ancient city of Morgantina is on loan from the Museo Archeologico Regionale of Aidone, Sicily. These objects, which date from 400 to 200 B.C., were given as gifts by worshippers to Demeter and her daughter Persephone, goddesses of agricultural fertility who also presided over the feminine sphere. Ranging from brightly painted (and originally bejeweled) terracotta figures of the deities (at right) to personal ornaments such as bone hair pins and oil lamps used in nocturnal rituals, the artifacts reveal religious practices and highlight the vibrancy of local craftsmanship. The loans are showcased in a special installation in Gods and Goddesses (Gallery 104) at the Getty Villa.

Situated in the fertile hills of central Sicily, Morgantina has been under excavation by American and Italian archaeologists since 1955, bringing to light its sanctuaries, theater, public baths, market, and houses. As the site of a native Sikel village in the prehistoric period and a later Greek settlement from around 550 B.C., Morgantina attests to the integration between indigenous and colonial communities. Under Greek influence, the local religion centered on the cult of Demeter and Persephone (also known as Kore). Persephone's abduction by Hades (god of the Underworld) and their subsequent union provided the ancients with a divine explanation for the changing of the seasons. This myth was believed to have taken place in Sicily at Lake Pergusa, not far from Morgantina.

Several of the loans have been conserved by the Getty's Antiquities Conservation department. Treatment of a polychrome bust of Persephone (at left) uncovered a painted scene of dancing women decorating her garment.

About the Museo Archeologico Regionale of Aidone

The Museo Archeologico Regionale is located on the outskirts of the medieval city-center of Aidone. It is housed in an ex-Convent of the Capuchin Fathers, constructed between 1611 and 1613, the original architectural plan of which also included a Church, dedicated to San Francesco, and a graceful cloister. After a long and damaging period of abandonment, the baroque complex was the subject of a major restoration in 1984. It was appropriated by the museum for the purpose of exhibiting the history of Morgantina, a Sikel and Greek city, from the Bronze Age through the Roman Republican period. The collections on display come from the excavations conducted there since 1955 by Princeton University and the University of Virginia and by the Superintendencies of Syracuse, Agrigento, and Enna.

More information about the Museo Archeologico Regionale of Aidone is available on the museum's website (in Italian).

More information on the site and archaeology of Morgantina is available here.

Gallery Course

Death and Rebirth: Demeter and Persephone
Saturday, August 18, 1:00–4:00 p.m.
Learn about the power of goddesses Demeter and Persephone, then explore their cult in Sicily with installation curator Alexandra Sofroniew.